Romanian PM dispels British fears of immigrant 'invasion'

Romanian PM dispels British fears of immigrant 'invasion'

Romania's prime minister on Monday dismissed Britain's fears that floods of Romanian immigrants are heading to its shores -- and invited Britons over to his own country for a beer.

Writing in The Times newspaper, Victor Ponta insisted that rising wages and improved job prospects at home mean that Romanians will not be rushing to Britain when EU migration rules are relaxed in January 2014.

"Britain can rest assured. Romania needs its workers. They will be busy developing their own country," Ponta wrote.

He added that a nation such as his that counts Prince Charles among its fans "can't be that bad".

The heir to the British throne owns two holiday homes in Romania, one of which is run as a guesthouse. The prince also claims he is distantly related to Vlad the Impaler, the 15th-century Romanian warlord who inspired Bram Stoker's 1897 novel "Dracula".

Ponta said Romania would happily welcome other Britons for "a holiday in the sleepy villages that Prince Charles loves so much" or "a strong pint in the Old Town in Bucharest".

He said he was "rather perplexed" by reports in right-wing British newspapers that thousands of impoverished Romanians and Bulgarians were planning to move to Britain next year.